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The QC, Vol. 79, No. 09 • November 5, 1992

1992_11_05_p001

QUAKER CAMPUS
Volume LXXBL Number 9 V / Novomhor s. 1992
. Volume LXXIX, Number 9
November 5,1992
BOG Decides Petition
Signatures Invalid
by Michele Apostolos
QC News Editor
According to BOG President Pro-Temp. Jennifer
Kelly, "there is an estimated
40 valid signatures on the
petition" requesting a recall
vote of ASWC President
Kevin McGlynn.
To conduct a recall vote
174 signatures are needed .
She said the reason only
40 signatures are considered
valid is that two petitions
were passed around, each
having a statement of purpose on the front page only.
Kelly said there are several
signatures on pages that have
nothing at the top.
BOG determined the signatures were not valid at a
closed BOG meeting Monday
night, Kelly said. McGlynn
was not present at this meeting because he and the BOG
members felt it would not be
appropriate for him to be
there.
BOG decided to request
that petitioners junior
Michelle Fischler and senior
Anne Massey recollect the
signatures that appeared on
those pages.
BOG's main concern according to Kelly is that the
signatures are underneath
a statement of purpose .
Kelly said BOG did not
specify exactly how they
should verify the signatures,
but she said BOG came up
with a variety of ways they
could do it.
Kelly said one way to do
it would be to put a piece of
paper with the statement of
purpose in the boxes of the
individuals who signed the
petition and to have them
sign and return it.
BOG is willing to pay
for any expenses incured in
doing this.
She said there does not
have to be the same people
signing it again, as long as
there are enough valid signatures.
BOG has yet to formally
present Massey and Fischler
with a request to recollect
the signatures. Kelly and
Off-Campus Representative
Dave Jarvis will meet with
them today along with Dave
Leonard, who has replaced
Please see BOG pg. 6
Orthogonians Reinstated
After Serving Half of Their Three Year Sanction, the Orthogonian Society
Has Been Granted Official Status by the Society Advisory Board
by Adam Webster
QC Editor-in-Chief
After serving one-and-a-
half years of a three-year sanction for various violations, the
Orthogonian Society was reinstated Friday by the Society
Advisory Board.
According to Steve Gothol d,
Dean of College Life, "The
Orthogonians have been
granted probationary reinstatement ... they may have meetings and a new member class in
January."
College President James
Ash said, 'The (Orthogonians)
are still under probation and
under a very strict set of restriction of conforming to the letter
and the spirit of the college."
One such condition is that the
society must conduct all activities, including meetings, with
one of its alumni advisors or its
faculty advisor present, Gothold
said.
The appointment of a faculty advisor was one ofthe original sanction stipulations and
the Orthogonians have named
Whittier political science professor John Neu as theirs.
Gothold said he could not
an
A* ■.,.;• ■■
■«r
«te
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eee||IIbb|;#beeb:b E:Bif :0|
ipf
■■Hi
3fev
imnmj§|i
John Young/QC Staff Photographer
Members of the Society in front of the "0 Ranch."
release the other stipulations.
However, he did comment that
the conditions were recommendations from his office to the
SAB and that the SAB amended
those as per its discussion Friday.
Gothold added that the reinstatement was "all being done
because of the exemplary work
of three alumni, all from the
'70s." The three alumni were
Ken Brooks, Gino Gaudio and
Dan Macaulay.
The alumni researched the
history of the society and came
up with the original ideals and
original pledging program, according to Gothold. They researched the state hazing statutes and Ash said, 'These reforms change the initiation process in ways that produce conformity with the law and with
the educational values of the
college, while at the same time,
they preserve the central values and heritage of the
Orthogonian society."
Orthogonian President
Kevin McGlynn agreed that the
support ofthe alumni the society received was beneficial.
Please see SOCIETY pg. 5
Hockey Team Insured, Will Play Tomorrow
by Michele Apostolos
QC News Editor
After delays due to lack of
liability insurance, the Whittier
College hockey team is now
insured according to all of the
requirements of the college
administration and is scheduled
to play its first game tomorrow
night.
"It (the team) has all forms
of insurance required including
medical for personal injury,
automobile and li ability," Harold
Hewitt, Vice President of
Business and Finance, said.
The same general liability
policy that covers other activities
on campus has been amended to
allow the hockey team to play.
This policy is with a
hHPVB
lip
I -%.
w
SpH
iifmMlm
Stephane Orosz/QC Photo Editor
The hockey team during a recent practice.
company that was formed in
1985 by Whittier College and
seven other colleges and
universities. Hewitt said the
idea behind the formation of
this company is that it is a less
expensive way to provide
liability coverage.
Hewitt is on the Board of
Directors of the company and
said he had to do "a lot of
negotiations with a bunch of
people" in order for this deal to
go through.
The company agreed to
Please see HOCKEY pg. 6
Leonard Replaces Kelly
as BOG Advisor
by Marce D. Scarbrough
QC Managing Editor
Ken Kelly, Associate
Dean of Student Activities,
was removed from his
position Tuesday as BOG
advisor according to Steve
Gothold, Dean of College Life.
"We are looking for
freshness and new energy in
helping BOG...with some of
the issues that are currently
dividing this campus,"
Gothold said.
That same day, Gothold
appointed Dave Leonard,
Associate Dean for
Residential Life, to fill the
position of advisor.
The position of
administrative advisor is
appointed by the Office of
College Life. That person is
supposed to serve as a liaison
between BOG and the
administration.
"Leonard is a skilled
administrator and mediator.
I find him to be a truthful and
demanding supervisor,"
Gothold said.
The move came at a time
when BOGis facinga number
of issues, including the issue
Please see ADVISOR pg. 4
What's Inside: A Useful Guide to the Quaker Campus
News
Election Coverage
Political science professor
Richard Harvey discusses
Clinton's victory. Also,
campus political gathering
ushers in new era. pg. 7.
Viewpoint
Women's Rights
SOS President and Love
For Life members discuss
their opposing viewpoints
of women's reproductive
rights, pg.3.
Features
Homecoming
Homecoming activities are
described and previewedfor
this upcoming weekend's
festivities and the events
gone by are recapped, pg. 9.
A&E
Woodstock Revisted
The college community
witnessed and participated
in the '92 version of the
classic concert at Whittier
Woodstock, pg. 11.
Sports
Cross Country
All ofthe women and some
of the men captured all-
conferencehonorsafter the
teams' second and fourth
place finishes, pg. 16.
/

QUAKER CAMPUS
Volume LXXBL Number 9 V / Novomhor s. 1992
. Volume LXXIX, Number 9
November 5,1992
BOG Decides Petition
Signatures Invalid
by Michele Apostolos
QC News Editor
According to BOG President Pro-Temp. Jennifer
Kelly, "there is an estimated
40 valid signatures on the
petition" requesting a recall
vote of ASWC President
Kevin McGlynn.
To conduct a recall vote
174 signatures are needed .
She said the reason only
40 signatures are considered
valid is that two petitions
were passed around, each
having a statement of purpose on the front page only.
Kelly said there are several
signatures on pages that have
nothing at the top.
BOG determined the signatures were not valid at a
closed BOG meeting Monday
night, Kelly said. McGlynn
was not present at this meeting because he and the BOG
members felt it would not be
appropriate for him to be
there.
BOG decided to request
that petitioners junior
Michelle Fischler and senior
Anne Massey recollect the
signatures that appeared on
those pages.
BOG's main concern according to Kelly is that the
signatures are underneath
a statement of purpose .
Kelly said BOG did not
specify exactly how they
should verify the signatures,
but she said BOG came up
with a variety of ways they
could do it.
Kelly said one way to do
it would be to put a piece of
paper with the statement of
purpose in the boxes of the
individuals who signed the
petition and to have them
sign and return it.
BOG is willing to pay
for any expenses incured in
doing this.
She said there does not
have to be the same people
signing it again, as long as
there are enough valid signatures.
BOG has yet to formally
present Massey and Fischler
with a request to recollect
the signatures. Kelly and
Off-Campus Representative
Dave Jarvis will meet with
them today along with Dave
Leonard, who has replaced
Please see BOG pg. 6
Orthogonians Reinstated
After Serving Half of Their Three Year Sanction, the Orthogonian Society
Has Been Granted Official Status by the Society Advisory Board
by Adam Webster
QC Editor-in-Chief
After serving one-and-a-
half years of a three-year sanction for various violations, the
Orthogonian Society was reinstated Friday by the Society
Advisory Board.
According to Steve Gothol d,
Dean of College Life, "The
Orthogonians have been
granted probationary reinstatement ... they may have meetings and a new member class in
January."
College President James
Ash said, 'The (Orthogonians)
are still under probation and
under a very strict set of restriction of conforming to the letter
and the spirit of the college."
One such condition is that the
society must conduct all activities, including meetings, with
one of its alumni advisors or its
faculty advisor present, Gothold
said.
The appointment of a faculty advisor was one ofthe original sanction stipulations and
the Orthogonians have named
Whittier political science professor John Neu as theirs.
Gothold said he could not
an
A* ■.,.;• ■■
■«r
«te
■B
eee||IIbb|;#beeb:b E:Bif :0|
ipf
■■Hi
3fev
imnmj§|i
John Young/QC Staff Photographer
Members of the Society in front of the "0 Ranch."
release the other stipulations.
However, he did comment that
the conditions were recommendations from his office to the
SAB and that the SAB amended
those as per its discussion Friday.
Gothold added that the reinstatement was "all being done
because of the exemplary work
of three alumni, all from the
'70s." The three alumni were
Ken Brooks, Gino Gaudio and
Dan Macaulay.
The alumni researched the
history of the society and came
up with the original ideals and
original pledging program, according to Gothold. They researched the state hazing statutes and Ash said, 'These reforms change the initiation process in ways that produce conformity with the law and with
the educational values of the
college, while at the same time,
they preserve the central values and heritage of the
Orthogonian society."
Orthogonian President
Kevin McGlynn agreed that the
support ofthe alumni the society received was beneficial.
Please see SOCIETY pg. 5
Hockey Team Insured, Will Play Tomorrow
by Michele Apostolos
QC News Editor
After delays due to lack of
liability insurance, the Whittier
College hockey team is now
insured according to all of the
requirements of the college
administration and is scheduled
to play its first game tomorrow
night.
"It (the team) has all forms
of insurance required including
medical for personal injury,
automobile and li ability," Harold
Hewitt, Vice President of
Business and Finance, said.
The same general liability
policy that covers other activities
on campus has been amended to
allow the hockey team to play.
This policy is with a
hHPVB
lip
I -%.
w
SpH
iifmMlm
Stephane Orosz/QC Photo Editor
The hockey team during a recent practice.
company that was formed in
1985 by Whittier College and
seven other colleges and
universities. Hewitt said the
idea behind the formation of
this company is that it is a less
expensive way to provide
liability coverage.
Hewitt is on the Board of
Directors of the company and
said he had to do "a lot of
negotiations with a bunch of
people" in order for this deal to
go through.
The company agreed to
Please see HOCKEY pg. 6
Leonard Replaces Kelly
as BOG Advisor
by Marce D. Scarbrough
QC Managing Editor
Ken Kelly, Associate
Dean of Student Activities,
was removed from his
position Tuesday as BOG
advisor according to Steve
Gothold, Dean of College Life.
"We are looking for
freshness and new energy in
helping BOG...with some of
the issues that are currently
dividing this campus,"
Gothold said.
That same day, Gothold
appointed Dave Leonard,
Associate Dean for
Residential Life, to fill the
position of advisor.
The position of
administrative advisor is
appointed by the Office of
College Life. That person is
supposed to serve as a liaison
between BOG and the
administration.
"Leonard is a skilled
administrator and mediator.
I find him to be a truthful and
demanding supervisor,"
Gothold said.
The move came at a time
when BOGis facinga number
of issues, including the issue
Please see ADVISOR pg. 4
What's Inside: A Useful Guide to the Quaker Campus
News
Election Coverage
Political science professor
Richard Harvey discusses
Clinton's victory. Also,
campus political gathering
ushers in new era. pg. 7.
Viewpoint
Women's Rights
SOS President and Love
For Life members discuss
their opposing viewpoints
of women's reproductive
rights, pg.3.
Features
Homecoming
Homecoming activities are
described and previewedfor
this upcoming weekend's
festivities and the events
gone by are recapped, pg. 9.
A&E
Woodstock Revisted
The college community
witnessed and participated
in the '92 version of the
classic concert at Whittier
Woodstock, pg. 11.
Sports
Cross Country
All ofthe women and some
of the men captured all-
conferencehonorsafter the
teams' second and fourth
place finishes, pg. 16.
/